Yaron Zilberman

Yaron Zilberman (Hebrew: ירון זילברמן; born October 2, 1966) is an Israeli-American director, screenwriter and producer.

Yaron Zilberman
Born (1966-10-02) October 2, 1966
Haifa, Israel
OccupationFilm director, screenwriter, producer

Career

Zilberman directed, co-wrote and produced A Late Quartet which starred Philip Seymour Hoffman, Christopher Walken, Catherine Keener, Mark Ivanir and Imogen Poots. The film premiered in the Special Presentation program at the 2012 Toronto International Film Festival. Inspired by and structured around Beethoven's Opus 131, the film follows the world-renowned Fugue String Quartet after its cellist Peter Mitchell (Christopher Walken) is diagnosed with Parkinson’s Disease.[1] Cinematographer Frederick Elmes lensed the film and composer Angelo Badalamenti composed the score for the film. The Brentano String Quartet played the quartet music for the soundtrack and Anne Sofie von Otter appears as the cellist's late wife, singing Korngold's "Marietta's Song" from Die tote Stadt. The film was theatrically released in over 30 countries and was critically acclaimed.[2][3] It was a New York Times Critics Pick.[4] Rolling Stone’s Peter Travers called it “a shining gem of a movie”[5] and Roger Ebert said “it does one of the most interesting things any film can do. It shows how skilled professionals work.”[6]

Zilberman made his directorial debut with his theatrical feature documentary Watermarks (2004), which follows the champion women swimmers of Hakoah Vienna as they reunite at their old swimming pool 65 years after they were forced by the Nazis to flee Austria. Watermarks won nine film festival awards and enjoyed a successful theatrical run internationally.[7]

Personal life

Zilberman lives in New York City with his wife, producer Tamar Sela, and their children.

He is a graduate of Massachusetts Institute of Technology (MIT).

Filmography

Director

Writer

Producer

gollark: People are going to *use computers*, which is why I think we should have teaching on stuff like solving random problems instead.
gollark: *Reading manuals.*
gollark: I think it would be much more useful to actually teach basic computer use. How to solve basic problems (application of the search engine). What all the various cables are for. Basic computer maintenence.
gollark: They also gave people custom hardware (micro:bits), which probably isn't great either since people won't realize you can just do programming stuff on a regular home computer or laptop to automate annoying tasks and whatnot.
gollark: But then they only get taught random details about some car components, and then build cars out of paper.

References

  1. "A Late Quartet (2012) - IMDB". Internet Movie Database.
  2. "A Late Quartet". Rotten Tomatoes. Retrieved 21 September 2016.
  3. Lemenick, Lou. "Strikes all the right chords". NY Post.
  4. Holden, Stephen. "'A Late Quartet,' Directed by Yaron Zilberman - New York Times". nytimes.com.
  5. Travers, Peter. "A Late Quartet". Rolling Stone.
  6. Ebert, Roger. "A Late Quartet review". www.rogerebert.com/reviews/a-late-quartet-2012. Retrieved October 31, 2012.
  7. "Watermarks - awards". IMDB.com. Retrieved 21 September 2016.
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